B. H. Fairchild

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B.H. Fairchild is an award-winning American poet and college professor.

Born in 1942, B.H. Fairchild grew up in small towns in the oil fields of Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas, later working through high school and college for his father, a lathe machinist.[1]

He teaches English at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas[2][3] National Endowment for the Arts Web site, Web page titled "Features: Writer's Corner: B.H. Fairchild", accessed October 29, 2006</ref> lives in Claremont, California with his wife and daughter.

His poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, The Southern Review, Poetry, TriQuarterly, The Hudson Review, Salmagundi, The Sewanee Review and other journals.

Fairchild has written that a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts was vital to his career as a poet: "It's very simple: without an NEA Fellowship in 1989-90, I would not have been able to complete my second book, Local Knowledge, nor have had the necessary time to compose the core poems for The Art of the Lathe, my third book, which, I am proud to say, received the Kingsley Tufts Award and was a finalist for the National Book Award, thus bringing my work to a wider audience than the immediate members of my family and also, therefore, making future work possible."[4]

Contents

[edit] Books

[edit] Poetry

[edit] Other

  • Such Holy Song, a study of William Blake

[edit] Awards

  • Walter E. Dakin Fellowship to the Sewanee Writers Conference
  • National Writers’ Union First Prize
  • AWP Anniversary Award

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ [1] Mariani, Paul "A Conversation with B.H. Fairchild", from ' 'Image' ' magazine, Fall 2005, reproduced by Poetry Daily Web site, accessed October 29, 2006
  2. ^ NEA Writers' Corner: A Starlit Night by B.H. Fairchild
  3. ^ B. H. Fairchild | Texas Christian University
  4. ^ [2] National Endowment for the Arts Web site, Web page titled "Features: Writer's Corner: B.H. Fairchild", accessed October 29, 2006
  5. ^ [3]Waywiser Press Web site, Web page titled "B.H. Fairchild, ' 'The Art of the Lathe' ' ", accessed October 29, 2006

[edit] External links

  • [4]Article on Fairchild's poems in Contemporary Poetry Review ("The Plains Pastoral of B.H. Fairchild" by Christopher Bakken, undated)

[edit] Poetry online